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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
v-ryk is the oncogene in the avian acute oncogenic retrovirus RPL30, its cellular counterpart, c-ryk, is described in this report. To avoid the confusion caused by another gene with the same name, we renamed v-ryk to be v-eyk, thereby changing the proto-oncogene's name to c-eyk. c-eyk is expressed highly in chicken spleen and moderately in many other tissues including embryonic tissues. Its cDNA is 3061 base pairs encoding a receptor-type
protein tyrosine kinase
(
PTK
) of 974 amino acids. Compared to c-
Eyk
, v-
Eyk
is a truncated
PTK
lacking the extracellular and transmembrane regions of c-
Eyk
in addition to two amino acid changes. c-
Eyk
has two C2-type Ig domains and two FN-III domains in its extracellular region, forming a new subfamily of receptor-type
PTK
together with
UFO
/Axl/Ark. As suggested by Ig/Fn-III domains in many cell adhesion molecules, this subfamily of
PTK
may mediate cell-cell interaction.
...
PMID:The proto-oncogene of v-eyk (v-ryk) is a novel receptor-type protein tyrosine kinase with extracellular Ig/GN-III domains. 750 87
KIT
constitutes the cell surface transmembrane receptor
protein tyrosine kinase
for a growth factor variously termed steel factor (SLF), stem cell factor, mast cell growth factor, or Kit ligand. Inherited mutations of the
KIT
gene result in piebaldism in humans and dominant white spotting (W) in mice. Patches of hypopigmented skin and hair in these disorders represent regions lacking in melanocytes, the result of defective melanoblast differentiation, migration, proliferation, or survival during embryonic development. Here we show that incubation of normal human melanocytes with a
KIT
antisense oligodeoxynucleotide greatly inhibits cell proliferation in culture, whereas incubation with a
KIT
sense oligodeoxynucleotide has no effect. The
KIT
oligodeoxynucleotides also had little or no effect on cell survival.
...
PMID:Inhibition of proliferation of human melanocytes by a KIT antisense oligodeoxynucleotide: implications for human piebaldism and mouse dominant white spotting (W). 751 54
The activation of
protein tyrosine kinase
(PTKs) and subsequent tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins is a critical initial signal in the response of eukaryotic cells to mitogens, differentiative signals, and other stimuli. A number of
PTK
substrates have been identified and many of these are components of signal transduction pathways that regulate cell function. However, the majority of proteins that are tyrosine-phosphorylated in response to receptor signaling remain unidentified. As some of these unidentified
PTK
substrates may also be signal-transducing proteins, their identification and functional characterization is an important objective towards understanding receptor signaling. We describe the development of a comprehensive and general process for the isolation and structural characterization of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins. The method involves enrichment by anti-phosphotyrosine affinity chromatography, electrophoretic concentration and separation, and proteolytic fragmentation of individual purified phosphoproteins. Resulting peptide fragments are separated by microbore reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and a portion of the eluted peptides are subjected to electrospray-mass spectrometry (ES/MS) for accurate determination of peptide masses. Proteolytic fragmentation of a protein produces a characteristic set of peptide masses that can be used to rapidly identify the protein by searching databases containing the peptide mass "fingerprints" for all known proteins. The identity of the protein established by this method can be confirmed by sequence analysis of selected peptides. We have applied this procedure to the analysis of
PTK
substrates from B lymphocytes that have been stimulated through the B cell antigen receptor (BCR). Signaling by this receptor is involved in the generation of antibodies against foreign molecules (antigens). The BCR activates multiple PTKs which phosphorylate at least 30 different proteins. We have identified several of these tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins, including Syk, a
PTK
that is known to be tyrosine-phosphorylated in activated B cells. Thus, the procedure described here can be used to identify regulatory proteins of low abundance. The process consists of a logical succession of compatible steps that avoids pitfalls inherent to prior attempts to characterize low abundance phosphoproteins and should find wide use for the identification of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins in other cell types.
...
PMID:Purification and identification of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins from B lymphocytes stimulated through the antigen receptor. 751 80
Fertilization results in activation of many protein kinases which function during egg activation. We have used metabolic labelling and immunoprecipitation to study changes in the phosphorylation state of a 57-KDa src-family
protein tyrosine kinase
during fertilization of the sea urchin egg. The kinase was phosphorylated on serine at all periods studied but it was also phosphorylated transiently on tyrosine at 5 minutes post insemination and then on threonine at 90 minutes after fertilization. These data indicate that the 57-KDa
PTK
may be under complex regulatory control during the first cell cycle.
...
PMID:Differential phosphorylation of a 57-KDa protein tyrosine kinase during egg activation. 753 72
To identify genes involved in signal transduction pathways that regulate T cell activation and development, murine fetal thymocytes were screened for expression of
protein tyrosine kinase
family members by the polymerase chain reaction. Using this approach, a non-
receptor protein tyrosine kinase
, txk, was identified and cloned. Tsk is expressed in thymocytes as early as fetal day 13.5 and its expression at the mRNA level continues throughout development. Txk transcripts are present in thymocytes, peripheral T cells and mast cell lines, but are not detectable in B cell macrophage/monocyte cell lines or in non-hematopoietic fetal or adult tissues. In both thymocytes and T cells, txk transcripts are down-regulated after activation with PMA and ionomycin, concanavalin A or T cell receptor cross-linking. Sequence analysis indicates that txk contains SH2, SH3 and kinase catalytic domains and belongs to the tec family of cytoplasmic protein tyrosine kinases which includes tec, itk and btk. Its unique N-terminus contains a proline-rich region, but unlike the other tec family members, does not contain a pleckstrin homology domain. The restricted expression pattern of txk and its regulation by T cell activation make it an excellent candidate for involvement in signal transduction during thymocyte development.
...
PMID:Murine txk: a protein tyrosine kinase gene regulated by T cell activation. 754 61
Defects in the c-ret proto-oncogene, a member of the
protein tyrosine kinase
receptor family, have recently been linked to two types of genetic syndromes, Hirschsprung's disease and the multiple endocrine neoplasia family of inherited cancers.
RET
/ptc2 is the product of a papillary thyroid carcinoma translocation event between the genes coding for c-ret and the type I alpha regulatory subunit of protein kinase A (RI alpha) (Lanzi, C., Borrello, M., Bongarzone, I., Migliazza, A., Fusco, A., Grieco, M., Santoro, M., Gambetta, R., Zunino, F., Della Porta, G., and Pierotti, M. (1992) Oncogene 7, 2189-2194). The resulting 596-residue protein contains the first two-thirds of RI alpha and the entire tyrosine kinase domain of c-ret (RETtk). An in vivo assay of growth stimulatory effects was developed, which consisted of microinjecting a
RET
/ptc2 expression plasmid into the nuclei of 10T1/2 mouse fibroblasts and observing the incorporation of 5-bromodeoxyuridine. This assay was used to determine that only the dimerization domain of RI alpha fused to RETtk is required for
RET
/ptc2's mitogenic activity. In addition, all of the reported Hirschsprung's disease point mutations in the RETtk (S289P, R421Q, and R496G) inactivate
RET
/ptc2 in our assay, confirming that these are loss of function mutations. Two tyrosines outside the conserved kinase core were also identified that are essential for full mitogenic activity of
RET
/ptc2. These two tyrosines, Tyr-350 and Tyr-586, are potential sites for Src homology 2 and phosphotyrosine binding domain interactions.
...
PMID:Tyrosines outside the kinase core and dimerization are required for the mitogenic activity of RET/ptc2. 755 72
Ninety minutes after i.v. injection of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (1 mg/kg) into rats, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-stimulated superoxide anion (O2-) secretion was enhanced in suspensions of in vivo LPS-treated alveolar macrophages (AM phi) when compared with saline (SAL)-treated AM phi. The purpose of this investigation was to dissect the in vitro mechanism of PMA-stimulated O2- generation in both LPS and SAL-treated rat AM phi, with a panel of inhibitors of protein kinase C (PKC), protein serine-threonine phosphatase(s) (PSP),
protein tyrosine kinase
(s) (
PTK
) and phosphatase(s) (PTP), phospholipase A2 (PLA2), cyclooxygenase (CO) and 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO). The following agents blocked PMA-stimulated O2- generation in both LPS- and SAL-treated AM phi (expressed as percentage of control): 1) PKC inhibitors: staurosporine: 100 nM, 7.0% (LPS) and 5.6% (SAL); sphingosine: 10 microM, 21% (LPS) and 10.5% (SAL); 2)
PTK
inhibitor: genistein: 100 microM, 44% (LPS) and 31% (SAL); 3) PTP inhibitors: phenylarsine oxide, 10 microM, 12.1% (LPS) and 18% (SAL); diamide, 1000 microM, 10.1% (LPS) and 10.5% (SAL); and 4) PLA2 inhibitors: manoalide: 1 microM, 29.3% (LPS) and 5.2% (SAL); scalaradial: 1 microM, 7.7% (LPS) and 7.1% (SAL); and WAY 125,984: 10 microM, 17.1% (LPS) and 14.5% (SAL). In addition, it was observed that exogenously added arachidonic acid (AA)-stimulated O2- generation in a time- and dose-dependent manner in both LPS and SAL-treated AM phi. The following inhibitors enhanced or did not affect PMA-stimulated O2- generation in LPS- and SAL-treated AM phi (expressed as percentage of of control): 1) PSP inhibitors: okadaic acid: 0.5 microM, 117% (LPS) and 153% (SAL); calyculin A: 1 microM, 112% (LPS) and 101% (SAL); 2) CO and 5-LO inhibitors: indomethacin: 10 microM, 107% (LPS) and 90% (SAL); WY 50, 295: 1 microM, 99% (LPS) and 103% (SAL); and 3) the PTP inhibitor orthovanadate upon prolonged preincubation. In both in vivo LPS- or SAL-primed AM phi, PMA-stimulated O2- generation appears to be modulated by PKC, PLA2, AA,
PTK
, PTP and PSP. No modulatory role was evident for either CO or 5-LO metabolites. These findings might bear on the design of therapeutic approaches for the modulation of O2- release by AM phi in the early stages of sepsis and adult respiratory distress syndrome.
...
PMID:Modulation of superoxide generation in in vivo lipopolysaccharide-primed rat alveolar macrophages by arachidonic acid and inhibitors of protein kinase C, phospholipase A2, protein serine-threonine phosphatase(s), protein tyrosine kinase(s) and phosphatase(s). 761 27
The c-fes proto-oncogene product is expressed predominantly in hematopoietic cells of the myeloid lineage and has been implicated in the regulation of myeloid differentiation. The c-fes locus encodes a 93-kDa
protein tyrosine kinase
(p93c-fes) that possesses several structural features characteristic of the cytoplasmic class of protein tyrosine kinases, including a consensus sequence for autophosphorylation surrounding Tyr-713 and a src homology 2 (SH2) domain. To assess the effect of each of these potential regulatory sites on p93c-fes
protein tyrosine kinase
activity, we specifically deleted the c-fes SH2 domain using the polymerase chain reaction and replaced Tyr-713 with phenylalanine by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis (Y713F mutant). The resulting mutants were expressed in Escherichia coli and assayed for changes in
protein tyrosine kinase
activity using an immune complex kinase assay. Both mutations produced a marked decrease in the rate and extent of autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of the model substrate, enolase. To test whether the c-fes SH2 domain could interact with the autophosphorylated kinase domain, the SH2 domain was expressed as a fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase and immobilized on glutathione-agarose. The recombinant c-fes SH2 domain precipitated p93c-fes as readily as a monoclonal antibody. Binding of the SH2 domain to p93c-fes was completely dependent upon autophosphorylation, as a kinase-defective mutant of p93c-fes was not precipitated by the SH2 domain. High-affinity binding was also observed with recombinant SH2 domains from v-src and v-fps, raising the possibility of protein-protein interactions between various members of the cytoplasmic
PTK
family. These results indicate that the c-fes SH2 domain and consensus autophosphorylation site (Tyr-713) play major roles in the positive regulation of p93c-fes tyrosine kinase activity, possibly through intramolecular interaction.
...
PMID:Regulation of the human c-fes protein tyrosine kinase (p93c-fes) by its src homology 2 domain and major autophosphorylation site (Tyr-713). 768 63
Spontaneous apoptosis in germinal center (GC) B cells can be arrested either by engaging cell surface immunoglobulin (Ig) with immobilized ligand or, more effectively, by treatment with soluble monoclonal antibody (mAb) directed against CD40. The present study examines the intracellular signal transduction pathways through which rescue from spontaneous apoptosis is engendered in GC B cells following ligation of surface CD40. Cross-linking the surface CD40 of GC B cells with mAb consistently resulted in enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation on a number of distinct substrates: this process could be blocked, in a dose-dependent fashion, by pre-treating GC B cells with the selective
protein tyrosine kinase
(s) (
PTK
) inhibitor, herbimycin A. Moreover, the pattern of phosphorylation on tyrosine observed following treatment with anti-CD40 was remarkably similar to that triggered by polyvalent anti-Ig. By contrast, anti-CD40 failed to stimulate the increase in inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and cytosolic free calcium observed in both GC B cells and resting B lymphocytes following ligation of surface Ig. The involvement of the signaling pathways generated in the rescue of GC B cells from apoptosis was studied by using selective inhibitors of
PTK
and of extracellular and intracellular Ca2+. Pre-incubation with the
PTK
inhibitor herbimycin A (5 microM) abrogated anti-CD40-mediated rescue of GC B cells from apoptosis, while genistein (40 microM) and the tyrphostins AG490 (10 microM) and AG814 (25 microM) significantly inhibited this process. Consistent with these results, herbimycin A (5 microM) abolished the expression of the 26 kDa bcl-2 protooncogene product, which confers resistance to apoptosis, normally observed following culture with anti-CD40. The Ca2+ chelators BAPTA and EGTA did not significantly affect CD40-promoted rescue. Taken together, these results indicate that CD40 of GC B cells is coupled to functional
PTK
but not to the phosphatidylinositol signaling pathway and that tyrosine phosphorylation is mandatory for CD40-mediated rescue of GC B cells from apoptosis.
...
PMID:Protein tyrosine phosphorylation is mandatory for CD40-mediated rescue of germinal center B cells from apoptosis. 769 10
Antigenic cross-linking of the high affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilon R1) on mast cells results in
protein tyrosine kinase
activation. The object of the present study was to explore the regulation of the SH2 and SH3 domain containing adapter molecule Grb2 by Fc epsilon R1-stimulated
PTK
signal transduction pathways. Affinity purification of in vivo Grb2 complexes together with in vitro experiments with Grb2 glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins were used to analyze Grb2 complexes in the mast cell line RBL2H3. The data show that in RBL2H3 cells several different proteins are complexed to the SH3 domains of Grb2. These include the p21ras guanine nucleotide exchange factor Sos, two basally tyrosine-phosphorylated 110- and 120-kDa molecules, and a 75-kDa protein that is a substrate for Fc epsilon R1-activated PTKs. By analogy with Sos, p75, p110 and p120 are candidates for Grb2 effector proteins which suggests that Grb2 may be a pleiotropic adapter. Two Grb2 SH2-binding proteins were also characterized in RBL2H3 cells; the adapter Shc and a 33-kDa molecule. Shc is constitutively tyrosine phosphorylated in unstimulated cells and Fc epsilon R1 ligation induces no changes in its phosphorylation or binding to Grb2. In contrast, p33 is a substrate for Fc epsilon R1-activated PTKs and binds to Grb2 SH2 domains in Fc epsilon R1 activated but not quiescent cells. The beta subunit of the Fc epsilon R1 is a 33-kDa tyrosine phosphoprotein, but the p33 Grb2-binding protein described in the present report is not the Fc epsilon R1 beta chain and its identity is unknown. The present report thus demonstrates that there are multiple Grb2 containing protein complexes in mast cells of which a subset are Fc epsilon R1-regulated. Two other of the Grb2-binding proteins described herein are tyrosine phosphorylated in response to Fc epsilon R1 ligation: the 75-kDa protein which binds to Grb2 SH3 domains and the 33-kDa protein that associates with the Grb2 SH2 domain. We propose that protein complex formation by Grb2 is an important consequence of Fc epsilon R1 cross-linking and that this may be a signal transduction pathway which acts synergistically with calcium/PKC signals to bring about optimal mast cell end function.
...
PMID:Regulation of the adapter molecule Grb2 by the Fc epsilon R1 in the mast cell line RBL2H3. 772 78
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